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[003] ssimo3 Current Version
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I’ve been watching many Christmas movies as of late, and I noticed that one thing stands out among the examples of {{Yet Another Christmas Carol}} when compared to the examples of {{Its A Wonderful Plot}} , {{Gift of the Magi Plot}} , etc. The examples of {{Yet Another Christmas Carol}} are nearly always {{Exactly What It Says on the Tin}}, whereas the examples of the other tropes provide no clue as to which plot they recycle if any at all. I’m wondering if, for each subtrope of this trope, anybody can comment on the likelihood that somebody will know that a work is an example of the subtrope before consuming the work.
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I’ve been watching many Christmas movies as of late, and I noticed that one thing stands out among the examples of {{Yet Another Christmas Carol}} when compared to the examples of {{Its A Wonderful Plot}}, {{Gift of the Magi Plot}} , etc. The examples of {{Yet Another Christmas Carol}} are nearly always {{Exactly What It Says on the Tin}}, whereas the examples of the other tropes provide no clue as to which plot they recycle if any at all. I’m wondering if, for each subtrope of this trope, anybody can comment on the likelihood that somebody will know that a work is an example of the subtrope before consuming the work.
Changed line(s) 1 from:
n
I’ve been watching many Christmas movies as of late, and I noticed that one thing stands out among the examples of {{Yet Another Christmas Carol}} when compared to the examples of {{It’s A Wonderful Plot}} , {{“Gift of the Magi” Plot}} , etc. The examples of {{Yet Another Christmas Carol}} are nearly always {{Exactly What It Says on the Tin}}, whereas the examples of the other tropes provide no clue as to which plot they recycle if any at all. I’m wondering if, for each subtrope of this trope, anybody can comment on the likelihood that somebody will know that a work is an example of the subtrope before consuming the work.
to:
I’ve been watching many Christmas movies as of late, and I noticed that one thing stands out among the examples of {{Yet Another Christmas Carol}} when compared to the examples of {{Its A Wonderful Plot}} , {{Gift of the Magi Plot}} , etc. The examples of {{Yet Another Christmas Carol}} are nearly always {{Exactly What It Says on the Tin}}, whereas the examples of the other tropes provide no clue as to which plot they recycle if any at all. I’m wondering if, for each subtrope of this trope, anybody can comment on the likelihood that somebody will know that a work is an example of the subtrope before consuming the work.
Changed line(s) 1 from:
n
I’ve been watching many Christmas movies as of late, and I noticed that one thing stands out among the examples of {{Yet Another Christmas Carol}} when compared to the examples of {{It’s A Wonderful Plot}}, {{“Gift of the Magi” Plot}}, etc. The examples of {{Yet Another Christmas Carol}} are nearly always {{Exactly What It Says on the Tin}}, whereas the examples of the other tropes provide no clue as to which plot they recycle if any at all. I’m wondering if, for each subtrope of this trope, anybody can comment on the likelihood that somebody will know that a work is an example of the subtrope before consuming the work.
to:
I’ve been watching many Christmas movies as of late, and I noticed that one thing stands out among the examples of {{Yet Another Christmas Carol}} when compared to the examples of {{It’s A Wonderful Plot}} , {{“Gift of the Magi” Plot}} , etc. The examples of {{Yet Another Christmas Carol}} are nearly always {{Exactly What It Says on the Tin}}, whereas the examples of the other tropes provide no clue as to which plot they recycle if any at all. I’m wondering if, for each subtrope of this trope, anybody can comment on the likelihood that somebody will know that a work is an example of the subtrope before consuming the work.
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